“The vaccine is safe, effective, and the best way to keep our students protected against the virus," Los Angeles Unified School District Board President Kelly Gonez said in a tweet about the announcement. “The vaccine is safe, effective, & the best way to keep our students protected against the virus. We will work to ensure families have reliable medical information in the coming weeks.”

California’s Culver City Unified School District is thought to be the first district in the country to require COVID-19 vaccines for eligible students when it announced its mandate several weeks ago. But Los Angeles Unified is the country’s second-largest school system, and the first district of its size to require vaccination.

Los Angeles Unified district officials said in a press release that the vaccination requirement is an “additional step” to provide “another layer of safety in schools” alongside existing COVID-19 safety protocols.

Some of these other protocols in place include:

Daily health checks for everyone going onto school campusesMasksComprehensive COVID-19 testingContact tracing and isolation of casesHand sanitizerIncreased sanitization and cleaning of schoolsUpgraded ventilation

How Does the Mandate Work?

The Los Angeles Unified schools district is requiring all students who are eligible to be vaccinated against COVID-19 to be fully vaccinated by January 10, 2022, unless they have a qualified exemption.

The district stated that the only qualified exemption is a medical exemption, but didn’t explain further. The district also made it clear it will not accept religious or personal belief exemptions, stating, “state law does not recognize” those exemptions for student immunizations.

Currently, only children aged 12 and up are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in the U.S. Students in the school system who are 12 and older and participate in in-person extracurricular activities must receive their first dose of the vaccine by no later than October 3 and their second dose by no later than October 31.

Those who are 12 and older, but do not participate in these activities, must receive their first dose no later than November 21 and their second dose by December 19.

The district also addressed students who are not yet 12, saying that they must receive their first vaccine dose no later than 30 days after their twelfth birthday and their second dose no later than eight weeks after their twelfth birthday. It’s not clear what the deadline will be for students once the vaccine is approved for younger populations.

Once a student is vaccinated, they must upload their proof of vaccination to the district’s online Daily Pass account, which allows parents and students to book PCR COVID-19 tests and answer health check screening questions.

Other School Districts Will Likely Follow Suit

Doctors are applauding the move.

“I strongly support it,” Richard Watkins, MD, an infectious disease physician and professor of internal medicine at the Northeast Ohio Medical University, tells Verywell. “It takes leadership and courage to make difficult, yet necessary decisions.” Infectious disease expert Amesh A. Adalja, MD, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, tells Verywell that the district is “trying to use the best tool possible to keep COVID-19 from disrupting in-person schooling.”

Given the size of the Los Angeles Unified School District, Adalja says he anticipates it will spark similar mandates in school districts across the country.

“Since this is the second biggest school district in the country, it will likely prompt others to follow suit,” he says.

Adalja urges parents to strongly consider vaccination against COVID-19 for their children, regardless of whether their school district has a mandate.

“The COVID vaccines are safe and effective and the risk/benefit analysis favors vaccinating children," he says. “A simple vaccine makes COVID a non-issue for a child.”

Watkins agrees. “The benefits far outweigh the risks,” he says. “You don’t want COVID-19 and you don’t want your child to get it.”

The information in this article is current as of the date listed, which means newer information may be available when you read this. For the most recent updates on COVID-19, visit our coronavirus news page.